“I think he shouldn’t have said that because six months is not long enough to do much of anything, particularly in a city where everything is so broken,” Henderson said.

For a guy who was elected mayor of a city that actually is being run by the state-appointed emergency manager Kevyn Orr, Mike Duggan does give off all the appearances of the guy in charge.

Nolan Finley is the editor of the editorial page of the Detroit News. He says the average Detroit resident has come to see Duggan as the city’s leader.

“He’s been very smart in stepping up and saying, 'I’m the mayor' and trying to give the impression that he’s in charge. And a lot of people out there think he’s got a whole lot more authority than he does because of the image he projects,” Finley said.

Mike Duggan is working to make City Hall work. He's kick-starting a city government that has been stalled in many areas.

Stephen Henderson with the Free Press said people in City Hall are noticing.

“I think if you talk to people who work in City Hall, they’ll say for the first time in memory they have a boss who will say on Tuesday, ‘Hey, I want you to look into this,’ or ‘I want you to do it,' and will come back on Friday and see that you did it or looked into it. That just has not been the way City Hall has operated,” Henderson said.

Not only is he controlling his staff, but he’s also carefully controlling information and access to the Mayor’s office. He’s been described by a close aide as being “single-minded” in purpose in controlling the message coming out of City Hall.

Nolan Finley at the Detroit News says he expects more of that sort of thing.

“It’s going to be a hallmark of this administration too: control. They want to control absolutely everything. I mean, you saw the sort of brooming out of the Detroit Blight Authority and Bill Pulte strictly because the mayor wants control of all things that are happening in the city,” Finley said.

Bill Pulte was the guy who worked with former Mayor Dave Bing to get a lot of demolition done in the Brightmoor neighborhood and around Eastern Market.

“We knocked out 10 blocks of blight in 10 days,” Pulte noted during a conference in Detroit earlier this year.

But Pulte’s highly praised efforts didn’t seem to work with Duggan’s plans.

The mayor said there were too many agencies and groups working on blight and all going in different directions. So Duggan took control. Pulte ended up leaving Detroit.

"... at this point, our demo team is moving the fastest the city has ever seen."

“I mean, he’s free to work wherever he wants. So, we would have liked him to bid on the houses here and demonstrate he could knock them down at half the price. But, at this point, our demo team is moving the fastest the city has ever seen. And if Brooks Patterson needs help in Oakland County, I’m glad he’s got it,” Duggan quipped.

Stephen Henderson at the Free Press says he thinks Duggan wants to control a lot more.

There are entities the city used to operate. Things such as the Public Lighting Department, Cobo Hall, Eastern Market, the People Mover. Now they are operated by independent groups –and all operated better than when the city ran them.

“You know, that’s one of the things that Mayor Duggan says he doesn’t really like about city government is that there are these authorities now that have control over things that he would like to recentralize, I think, under his own control,” Henderson speculated.

Duggan has also been criticized for cronyism. A lot of the people he put in positions of authority are people he’s worked with in the past. Nolan Finley with the Detroit News says as far as he’s concerned, this fits a pattern.

“This is very much a machine politician. And you’re going to see as more and more control of the city goes to him, you’re going to see all the elements of a political machine. Whether that turns out to the good of Detroit or the bad of Detroit, that remains to be seen,” Finley said.

But allegations of being controlling or of cronyism don’t seem to bother a lot of residents.

Mike Duggan is basking in a honeymoon period. People are beginning to notice more regular garbage pickup, more streetlights turning on, more buses on the road, and more blight removal. Although some of those changes are at least in part due to the actions of the emergency manager, Duggan is getting the credit.

“Just in the short amount of time he’s had, he’s done did a lot. Can’t put nothing past on Mike Duggan. That’s like the best man ever for a mayor,” volunteered Jamie Warfield of the Old Redford neighborhood.

"Everything is an improvement. He’s doing his job, put it that way,” Curtis Love said at the Rosa Parks Transit Center.

And during an interview on the sidewalk along Warren Avenue, Charles Bess suddenly shouted, "Duggan, man!" He laughed and added, "Yeah. He’s a good guy.”

Personal style is another reason Duggan is popular. Duggan often dresses casually. He drives himself around the neighborhoods, stops and talks with residents.

Nolan Finley says having a mayor who seems like one of the people is in stark contrast to some past mayors who traveled in high style and with an entourage of body guards and staff.

“This ridiculous business of a mayor being trailed around by five, ten security officers in his own city everywhere he goes, that sent a signal that I think separated mayors from their people," Finley said, and noting Duggan's habit of driving himself around town, added, "I think it’s a good idea. You don’t need all that.”

But, Finley says Duggan has to work to identify with the people. His candidacy was challenged because he moved to Detroit only recently. And Finley says Duggan is very aware he’s a white mayor in a city that’s 80% African-American.

Mayor Duggan says he wants people to judge him and his administration on one thing: whether people stop moving out of Detroit.

“He’s still, you know, in the eyes of the people here a white suburbanite,” Finley said.

In the end it will all come down to whether Detroit residents continue to believe the mayor is bringing the city back. And Stephen Henderson at the Free Press says people are not going to be patient forever. It’s going to take more than six months to get all the streetlights turned on, get the buses regularly running on time, get tens of thousands of blighted buildings torn down.

“I think it’s frustrating, though, for people who live here. Everybody figures everything is going to get fixed in a short window of time and it’s just not very realistic,” Henderson said.

Mayor Duggan says he wants people to judge him and his administration on one thing: whether people stop moving out of Detroit.

“And we focus on what we can do to reverse the population decline in the city of Detroit. It governs every single decision we make. We do not have a future if we don’t start growing,” he said at this year's Mackinac Island Policy Conference.

At the Detroit News, Nolan Finley says that’s not a bad measure.

“Because if people stop leaving, it suggests they have a higher level of satisfaction with the way the city is operating or a greater faith in its future to solve its problems. Those are good benchmarks. If he can hit them, you know, he’s done enough in his first term.”

But, right now we’re not quite six months in. And we’ll hear from the mayor soon about what he and the Duggan administration have accomplished in that six months. He’ll tell us all exactly what he thinks we need to know.

Support for the Detroit Journalism Cooperative on Michigan Radio comes from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, Renaissance Journalism's Michigan Reporting Initiative, and the Ford Foundation.

The Detroit Institute of Arts is getting more help raising money for its share of the deal meant to shield its collection from possible liquidation.

The New York-based Mellon Foundation and Los Angeles-based J. Paul Getty Trust have committed a combined $13 million toward the “grand bargain.”

That proposal would direct more than $800 million to Detroit’s pension funds--sparing pensioners from severe cuts, while legally safeguarding the DIA’s assets from being sold to pay off city creditors.

The DIA needs to come up with a $100 million contribution to the grand bargain, this new commitment puts them more than 80% of the way there.

Getty Trust President and CEO James Cuno says the two foundations made a decision to contribute on their own.

“We jointly made the commitment,” Cuno says. “There was no conversation with the DIA about it, no request from the DIA.”

Cuno says the donation reflects the North American art world’s support for maintaining the DIA’s collection as a civic institution and public resource “in perpetuity.”

If put up for sale, the collection “would be lost to private individuals around the world,” Cuno says. “And the public of Detroit, and surrounding suburbs, would be deprived of a public resource they once had.”

Cuno says it’s “too soon to tell” whether the money will be disbursed to the museum as a lump sum upfront, or spread out over a period of years. Donors and museum officials are waiting for the larger grand bargain to be finalized.